Burkina Faso king on crocodile

Burkina Faso king on crocodile

$1,421.00

Burkina Faso king on crocodile

Size:

460mm High X 570mm Long X 320mm Wide

Weight:

7,9Kg

Detail: Bronze sculpture of a King smoking a pipe, enthroned and riding a crocodile

Burkina Faso king on crocodile. The virtuosity of copper-alloy castings, their technical perfection and artistic achievement afford evidence of the rich and multifarious artistic tradition of the peoples of West Africa. Starting from the earliest, 9th century castings by the difficult “cire perdue” technique found at Igbo-Ukwu in Nigeria, to the famous Benin bronzes whose earliest pieces date from late 15th century, and the copper-alloy castings of the peoples of Cameroon, Burkina Faso, the Ivory Coast and other countries, the bronze sculpture of Africa includes pieces of the highest artistic value. Judging by the surviving pieces, copper-alloy casting was not an art necessarily related only to cult practices. Examples are the cocks and roosters among the pieces found in Benin. They were often works without any practical, didactic or cult use; they were made, simply, as words of art. And as is the case in other parts of the world also, most often these pieces in expensive bronze belonged to the upper class, to kings and other persons in high social and materially privileged positions.

Product Description

Burkina Faso king on crocodile

Detail: Bronze sculpture of a King smoking a pipe, enthroned and riding a crocodile

Burkina Faso king on crocodile. The virtuosity of copper-alloy castings, their technical perfection and artistic achievement afford evidence of the rich and multifarious artistic tradition of the peoples of West Africa. Starting from the earliest, 9th century castings by the difficult “cire perdue” technique found at Igbo-Ukwu in Nigeria, to the famous Benin bronzes whose earliest pieces date from late 15th century, and the copper-alloy castings of the peoples of Cameroon, Burkina Faso, the Ivory Coast and other countries, the bronze sculpture of Africa includes pieces of the highest artistic value. Judging by the surviving pieces, copper-alloy casting was not an art necessarily related only to cult practices. Examples are the cocks and roosters among the pieces found in Benin. They were often works without any practical, didactic or cult use; they were made, simply, as words of art. And as is the case in other parts of the world also, most often these pieces in expensive bronze belonged to the upper class, to kings and other persons in high social and materially privileged positions.

These pieces are most often animals (such as the lion, leopard, cock, crocodile, antelope, bull, and birds) or the human figure typically with such objects as a gun, basket, pipe and the like. The sculpture of Ife, the religious and early political capital of the Yoruba (11th to 15th century) is particularly outstanding for the realistic representations of the human head, many of them life size.